Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the EU each weekday. Make sure you're signed up.
EU ambassadors meet in Brussels today amid growing concern that the trade deal struck by European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and President Donald Trump in July is on shaky ground. As Bloomberg reported this morning, the US has demanded concessions that potentially undercut the deal struck in Scotland. Concessions around the bloc’s digital legislation is one of Washington’s main demands. Complaints from Washington about the EU’s tech rules are nothing new, but the Trump administration has ramped up its criticisms of the EU’s current rulebook, specifically its flagship Digital Markets Act (DMA) and Digital Services Act (DSA). The EU has previously said that these rules won’t be changed. The US is also demanding exceptions on climate-related and corporate compliance rules. The accord between the two sides during the summer already ceded ground to the US in these areas, committing to “flexibilities” for US companies when it comes to the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), one of the bloc’s flagship climate policies, which will put a levy on emissions-intensive products coming into the EU. Brussels also said it would address the concerns of the US regarding its deforestation regulation and its much-maligned corporate reporting directives that were already getting pushback from EU businesses. Vehicles at the Port of Newark Auto Terminal in Newark, New Jersey, US. Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg The key challenge for Brussels is meeting the US demands on climate rules without looking like it’s selling out its green credentials in order to appease Trump. Already, other trading partners have spied an opening to snag their own concessions. South Africa has called for special treatment, citing the provisions in the EU-US trade deal. The UK, already reeling from the announcement of new EU steel tariffs yesterday, is hopeful of an exemption on CBAM before it enters into force next year. With ambassadors due to take stock of the broader US-EU trade relationship today, Brussels potentially has one ace up its sleeve. The European Parliament has yet to approve the deal, and is unlikely to do so if the US changes the goalposts. The US may want to extract as many concessions as possible, but officials believe that Trump does not want to blow up the whole agreement. Also on the agenda today is the 19th Russian sanctions package, with EU countries yet to agree to the proposal mainly due to Austrian efforts to secure compensation for Raiffeisen bank for damages it paid to Rasperia, a company linked to businessman Oleg Deripaska. |